1 Answer
1

If you click G or H couple of times, it'll increase it. Press 10 times the button, then you'll have 500ms. Check if holding the key make the difference. Or if you can increase that value in the Keyboard Shortcuts.

Hardcore way:
You can download Hex Workshop, TSearch or any other hex editor which can attach to the process, find which value which is increasing every 50ms and try to change it. Once you find the right place, there should be also pointer to the address by which value (50ms) it was changed. Once you find that in memory, you can easily change it in EXE file permanently. Sounds easy:)

My request is actually to have a 500ms shift with 1 hit. I often come to the point where I have to shift for 10 seconds! This is not a valid answer, but thanxs for trying ;-)
–
ChristopheAug 1 '12 at 8:10

Can you check if holding the key for longer does work? Have you check in the keyboard shortcuts that you can't change it?
–
kenorbAug 1 '12 at 8:19

I already looked into the preferences in order to modify the keyboard shortcuts, but I did not find anything. Furthermore, I'm open to the hardcore way, but I need some guidance - I cannot think I can easily find the constant that is added to the current subtitle "playhead" when hitting a key... If you have some knowledge how to accomplish that, I am interested!
–
ChristopheAug 1 '12 at 12:13

I played with it time ago, now I'm on Mac, so it'll not work. Basically change the offset to e.g. 250ms, attach to the process and find that value (you'll have thousands of them, change again to 350ms, find 350 within those which had previously 250, increase the value again, again and again, until you'll find one or two values in the memory, this is your offset in memory (you can change as you want). But now the question is, which memory has this 50ms. So then you have to find the option, if there is any, by code/memory changed that value.
–
kenorbAug 1 '12 at 12:26